Latest Articles

Latest Articles

The newest essays, interviews, and features from Big Think.

Could life on earth have come from outer-space? NASA finds that the universe is filled with giant carbon buckyballs that might have fallen to earth a long time ago.
"It's high time we recognize that carbon dioxide has been treated unfairly." Forbes' Larry Bell touts the accomplishments of the oft-reviled chemical compound.
The Supreme Court is to consider whether to strip First Amendment protection from violent videogames that critics say appeal to the deviant interests of children.
"Why does the name 'Hitler' still hold this magical fascination?" Cornelia Günther reviews only the second exhibition in Germany ever dedicated to Adolf Hitler.
Was the development of computing the most significant technological advance of the twentieth century? The Economist hosts an online forum for debate.
"Some of the boldest eco-warriors are those with the most to lose—our children." The Independent says pester power can get parents to go green.
"Much of what medical researchers conclude in their studies is misleading, exaggerated, or flat-out wrong." The Atlantic investigates the veracity of medical science.
A study from the U.K. says that while heroin causes the user harm, the adverse effects of alcohol on the wider community are significantly greater.
It’s actually pretty simple to get a severed mooshead delivered to your bed, Godfather style. Step One—raise money only from rich donors and foreign corporations to back GOP candidates you […]
Each state has its own state bird; why not a state movie? 
We have all sat through the laborious exercise of having a family picture taken. The end result of the chaos is typical across almost all families: a happy picture showing two gray […]
Theodore C. Sorensen, the special counsel to President John F. Kennedy who wrote the president's speeches and helped shape his policy, has died, according to an obituary in the New […]
I recently wrote of the bear pit into which habitual ‘Twitterers’ can fall, and today the British newspapers are full of writer and broadcaster, Stephen Fry’s Twitter comments about women […]
Let us now praise Doonesbury, a body of work and a work of art that could be compared to the Bayeux Tapestry, and which also has been compared, in the […]
"I don’t know why the telephone, the analog landline telephone, was never formally mourned." Virginia Heffernan remembers when phones actually worked.
"It's easy to decide to change, but harder to make that change feel normal." Trent Hamm gives tips on how to turn good intentions into new good habits.
It's time we accept that Halloween isn't dangerous, says Lenore Skenazy at The Wall Street Journal. While we're at it, we should give children their childhoods back.
While the U.K. will not prosecute Google for privacy violations, its legislature is considering whether the Internet should be more tightly regulated.
"China may not matter quite as much as you think." The Economist says that while China is becoming the world's biggest market, it cannot replace the world market.
"The U.S. has plenty of the metals that are critical to many green-energy technologies, but engineering and R&D expertise have moved overseas."